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Tag: U.S. border

  • Mexico boosts controls on cattle after new screwworm case found near US border

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    Mexico activated emergency controls Monday after detecting a new case of New World screwworm in cattle in the northern border state of Nuevo Leon state, the closest case to the U.S. border since the outbreak began last year.The animal, found in the town of Sabinas Hidalgo, came from the Gulf state of Veracruz, Mexico’s National Health for Food Safety and Food Quality Service said. The last case was reported July 9 in Veracruz, prompting Washington to suspend imports of live Mexican cattle.The parasite, a larva of the Cochliomyia hominivorax fly, attacks warm-blooded animals, including humans. Mexico has reported more than 500 active cases in cattle across southern states.The block on cattle imports has spelled trouble for Mexico’s government, which has already been busy trying to offset the brunt of U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff threats this year.The government and ranchers have sought to get the ban lifted. If it stays in place through the year, Mexico’s ranching federation estimates losses up to $400 million.Mexico’s Agriculture Secretary Julio Berdegué said in a post on X that Mexico is “controlling the isolated case of screwworm in Nuevo Leon,” under measures to fight the pest agreed with the U.S. in August.U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said Washington will take “decisive measures to protect our borders, even in the absence of cooperation” and said imports on Mexican cattle, bison and horses will remain suspended.“We will not rely on Mexico to defend our industry, our food supply or our way of life,” she said.

    Mexico activated emergency controls Monday after detecting a new case of New World screwworm in cattle in the northern border state of Nuevo Leon state, the closest case to the U.S. border since the outbreak began last year.

    The animal, found in the town of Sabinas Hidalgo, came from the Gulf state of Veracruz, Mexico’s National Health for Food Safety and Food Quality Service said. The last case was reported July 9 in Veracruz, prompting Washington to suspend imports of live Mexican cattle.

    The parasite, a larva of the Cochliomyia hominivorax fly, attacks warm-blooded animals, including humans. Mexico has reported more than 500 active cases in cattle across southern states.

    The block on cattle imports has spelled trouble for Mexico’s government, which has already been busy trying to offset the brunt of U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff threats this year.

    The government and ranchers have sought to get the ban lifted. If it stays in place through the year, Mexico’s ranching federation estimates losses up to $400 million.

    Mexico’s Agriculture Secretary Julio Berdegué said in a post on X that Mexico is “controlling the isolated case of screwworm in Nuevo Leon,” under measures to fight the pest agreed with the U.S. in August.

    U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said Washington will take “decisive measures to protect our borders, even in the absence of cooperation” and said imports on Mexican cattle, bison and horses will remain suspended.

    “We will not rely on Mexico to defend our industry, our food supply or our way of life,” she said.

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  • USDA to invest $750 million in facility to fight screwworm pest

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    WASHINGTON, D.C.: The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) will invest up to US$750 million to construct a new production facility in Texas designed to breed sterile flies as a weapon against the New World screwworm, a parasitic pest that threatens livestock by literally eating animals alive.

    Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced the plan this week, warning that the insect’s advance from Mexico toward the U.S. border has raised serious concerns about a potential outbreak.

    The project reflects growing alarm within the cattle industry, which fears that the return of screwworm could devastate herds and push already record-high beef prices even higher by tightening supplies.

    “It could truly crush the cattle industry,” Texas Governor Greg Abbott said during a joint press conference with Rollins. Texas, the nation’s largest cattle-producing state, has not seen screwworm infestations in decades, thanks to a landmark eradication program in the 20th century that relied on aerial releases of sterile flies.

    The new plant, planned for Edinburg, Texas, will operate alongside a previously announced dispersal center at Moore Air Base. Once completed, it will be capable of producing 300 million sterile screwworm flies each week, Rollins said. When released, the sterile flies overwhelm wild populations by disrupting reproduction, eventually collapsing infestations. While Rollins did not give an opening date, she has previously noted that such a facility typically requires two to three years to build.

    To bridge the gap until the Texas facility comes online, the USDA will allocate another $100 million to develop new screwworm-fighting technologies and to expand mounted patrols along the southern border, where wildlife could carry the pest into U.S. territory. The agency has already suspended imports of Mexican cattle as of July, further tightening domestic supplies that are already at historically low levels. “Those ports don’t open until we begin to push the screwworm back,” Rollins emphasized.

    The U.S. is also working with regional partners. A sterile fly production plant in Mexico is scheduled to open next year, while an existing facility in Panama breeds about 100 million sterile flies per week. According to USDA estimates, as many as 500 million sterile flies must be released each week to drive the screwworm southward and prevent it from re-establishing itself in North America.

    “This is not just a Texas problem—it’s a national concern,” Rollins said. “All Americans should be concerned.”

     

     

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  • Here’s what Houston-area law enforcement have to say about Senate Bill 4

    Here’s what Houston-area law enforcement have to say about Senate Bill 4

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    On Thursday, KPRC 2 reached out to sheriff’s offices in our area for comments on Senate Bill 4.

    Under this law, crossing the border illegally would be categorized as a Class B misdemeanor, carrying a potential jail sentence of up to six months. For repeat offenders, the penalties escalate to a second-degree felony, with imprisonment ranging from two to 20 years.

    KPRC 2′s Rilwan Balogun reached out to Houston Police and the Harris County Sheriff’s Office before a federal judge issued a ruling temporarily blocking the law from taking effect. Both didn’t want to comment but said they were monitoring ongoing legal challenges.

    Below are the comments we have secured and will update them as they come in.

    Here are the following offices who responded or spoken with KPRC 2′s Rilwan Balogun:

    AUSTIN COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

    “We don’t have any problems, haven’t had any impacts. When they arrest someone for a crime, it’s for the crime. If the person happens to be illegal, we turn the information to ICE and if they have any issues then they come and get them. If they don’t have a retainer and they satisfy all the local magistrates, they release them. We haven’t had an influx in our neighborhood.” – Sheriff Jack Brandon

    CHAMBERS COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

    “As a sheriff and a member of the association we are extremely supportive of the bill because our border sheriff’s and our borders that are inland are just getting inundated with the gone aways with the illegal immigration and people that are not going through the immigration process and they’re just illegally entering the country.” – Sheriff Brian Hawthorne

    FORT BEND COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

    “The Sheriff’s Office does not see the need to detain any person for the purpose of determining their immigration status or enforcing federal immigration laws.

    However, when a person is identified in a criminal investigation or when a person is detained for a violation of the law, the Sheriff’s Office will cooperate with federal immigration authorities. When a suspect is booked into the County detention center, any lawful orders to detain or transfer an inmate will be followed.

    Justice is blind means that race or ethnicity is not a reason to stop anyone on that basis alone. The Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Office is responsible for public safety programs and initiatives that improve the quality of life for all residents of Fort Bend County.” – Fort Bend Sheriff’s Office Spokesperson

    Espanol:

    “La Oficina del Sheriff no ve la necesidad de detener a ninguna persona con el fin de determinar su estatus migratorio o hacer cumplir las leyes de inmigracion.

    Sin embargo, cuando una persona es identificada en una investigacion criminal o cuando es detenida por una violacion de la ley, la Oficina del Sheriff cooperara con las autoridades federales de inmigracion.

    Cuando un sospechoso es ingresado en la carcel del condado, se seguiran todas las ordines legal para detener or tranferir a un recluso.

    La justicia es ciega significa que la raza o el origen étnico no es una razón para detener a nadie sólo por esa base.

    La Oficina del Sheriff del condado de Fort Bend es responsable de los programa e iniciativas de seguridad publica que mejoran la calidad de vida de todos los residents del condado de Fort Bend.”

    GRIMES COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

    “My response to you is rather simple, until the courts that are involved resolve the law completely and there is absolute clarity my Deputies with the Grimes County Sheriff’s Office will not be involved with this.” – Sheriff Don Sowell, Grimes County Sheriff’s Office

    JACKSON COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

    “As a member of Operation Lone Star Task Force this ruling is not going to change anything that Jackson County is currently doing in our effort to help secure the border, with the exception of not filing any additional criminal charges that may have resulted from Senate Bill 4.” – Jackson County Sheriff’s Office Spokesperson

    SAN JACINTO COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

    “We’re waiting to see what happens with the injunction. [We’re] not doing anything until legally covered by the courts.” – Chief Deputy Tim Kean

    Here are the following sheriff’s offices who have not responded or spoken to KPRC 2:

    Brazoria County Sheriff’s Office

    Calhoun County Sheriff’s Office

    Colorado County Sheriff’s Office

    Galveston County Sheriff’s Office

    Liberty County Sheriff’s Office

    Matagorda County Sheriff’s Office

    Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office

    Polk County Sheriff’s Office

    Waller County Sheriff’s Office

    Walker County Sheriff’s Office

    Washington County Sheriff’s Office

    Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.

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    Rilwan Balogun

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  • U.S. To Limit Asylum To Migrants Who Pass Through A 3rd Nation

    U.S. To Limit Asylum To Migrants Who Pass Through A 3rd Nation

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    WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration said Tuesday that it will generally deny asylum to migrants who show up at the U.S. southern border without first seeking protection in a country they passed through, mirroring an attempt by the Trump administration that never took effect because it was blocked in court.

    The measure, while stopping short of a total ban, imposes severe limitations on asylum for any nationality except Mexicans, who don’t have to travel through a third country to reach the U.S.

    The measure is almost certain to face legal challenges. President Donald Trump pursued a similar ban in 2019 but a federal appeals court prevented it from taking effect.

    The Biden administration rule proposed Tuesday has to first go through a 30-day public comment period before it can be formally adopted. If adopted it would remain in place for two years.

    Administration officials expect the rule will take effect when a pandemic-era rule that denies asylum on grounds of preventing the spread of COVID-19 ends. That rule, known as Title 42 authority, is set to expire May 11 but has been delayed twice by legal challenges from Republican-led states.

    The Homeland Security and Justice Departments argued that surging numbers of migrants left them little choice. They anticipate illegal crossings to climb to between 11,000 and 13,000 a day if no action is taken after Title 42 ends; that’s even higher than the 8,600 daily crossings in mid-December as anticipation spread among migrants and smugglers that Title 42 was about to end. At the last minute the Supreme Court kept it in place.

    Migrants wait to be processed after crossing the border on Jan. 6, 2023, near Yuma, Ariz. The Biden administration says it will generally deny asylum to migrants who show up at the U.S. southern border without first seeking protection in a country they passed through.

    AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File

    The proposed rule establishes “a rebuttable presumption of asylum ineligibility” for anyone who passes through another country to reach the U.S. border with Mexico without first seeking protection there, according to a notice in the Federal Register. Exceptions will be made for people with an “acute medical emergency,” “imminent and extreme threat” of violent crimes such as murder, rape or kidnapping, being a victim of human trafficking or “other extremely compelling circumstances.” Children traveling alone will also be exempted, according to the rule.

    The rule largely calls on prospective migrants to follow legal pathways to apply for asylum such as using the CBP One app, through which prospective migrants can schedule an appointment to apply to appear at a border entry point to apply for asylum. The administration portrayed these efforts as a way to protect migrants from the dangerous journeys as they travel north to the U.S. and allow the U.S. border entry points to manage the migrant flows in a “safe and efficient manner.” But critics have said the app has been beset by technical problems and its not clear how many appointments are available every day.

    U.S. officials insist the measure proposed Tuesday is different from Trump’s, largely because there is room for exemptions and because the Biden administration has made other legal pathways available, particularly humanitarian parole for Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, Venezuelans and Ukrainians.

    “We are a nation of immigrants, and we are a nation of laws. We are strengthening the availability of legal, orderly pathways for migrants to come to the United States, at the same time proposing new consequences on those who fail to use processes made available to them by the United States and its regional partners,” said Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas.

    The rule was first mentioned in early January as part of a wider announcement by the administration to let in 30,000 migrants a month from four countries — Haiti, Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua — provided they apply to come to the U.S. and don’t just arrive at the border. In the ensuing weeks, the administration said migrant encounters from those countries plummeted, and they’ve hailed it as a model for dealing with immigration.

    But immigration advocates have criticized attempts to limit asylum applications at the southern border, saying some migrants can’t wait in their home country and noting that other countries don’t have the same asylum protections as the U.S.

    Four Democratic senators — Bob Menendez and Cory Booker of New Jersey, Ben Ray Lujan of New Mexico and Alex Padilla of California — said they were “deeply disappointed” the administration was moving forward with the rule and urged it to reconsider.

    “We have an obligation to protect vulnerable migrants under domestic and international law and should not leave vulnerable migrants stranded in countries unable to protect them,” the senators’ statement read.

    Anu Joshi of the American Civil Liberties Union, which litigated many of the challenges to Trump’s immigration restrictions, sharply criticized the rule, saying it was simply revisiting Trump’s asylum ban.

    The new rule comes as President Joe Biden is facing a Republican-controlled House determined to make immigration a key issue as they attempt to portray the southern border as out of control.

    For asylum seekers traveling north through Central America and Mexico to the U.S. border, Costa Rica and Mexico have the most robust asylum systems. Both countries, however, have been overwhelmed by the surging number of asylum applications in recent years.

    Costa Rica, a country of only 5 million residents, trailed only the United States, Germany and Mexico in the number of asylum applications it received in 2021. In December, President Rodrigo Chaves decreed changes to the asylum system, alleging that it was being abused by economic migrants.

    Most of those seeking asylum in Costa Rica in recent years are Nicaraguans fleeing repression in that country. In 2012, Costa Rica received barely 900 asylum applications. Last year, the total was around 80,000.

    That has created a tremendous backlog and lengthened the process, something that led more Nicaraguans to look north to the United States last year.

    Mexico has been facing increased asylum applications for years and last year received 118,478, mostly from Honduras, Cuba, Haiti and Venezuela. Many migrants had used the asylum system to legally cross Mexico while in process and then to try to enter the U.S.

    Other countries along the migrant route north have very limited capacity for receiving asylum seekers.

    Spagat reported from San Diego. Associated Press writer Christopher Sherman in Mexico City contributed.

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